Quite good so far!
It's amazing to me how the WO1812 is one of the great neglected conflicts of history (unless you're Canadian, in which case it's a defining moment
), yet a different outcome (which was easily possible at numerous junctures) would've changed subsequent history considerably.
Here's a couple resources you may find useful, and if not at least fascinating timekillers:
https://publications.newberry.org/ahcbp/
The 1st is the Newberry Atlas of Historical County Boundaries - click a state then select a year. May come in handy if some nay-sayer (I will mention no names
) jumps in to blab about how many Americans were already in the Northwest and West.
Indian Land Cessions in the United States, 1784-1894 is in U.S. Congressional Serial Set, Number 4015, which contains the second part of the two-part Eighteenth Annual Report of the Bureau of American Ethnology to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1896-1897.
memory.loc.gov
The second is the LoC's collection of the Royce Maps, along with a handy numbered list of treaties, with details of tribes involved, some with info on how boundaries were determined, etc. Cross-reference the numbers on the parcel with the number on the treaty list, and you get a pretty good idea of what tribes were where, and how much land they held or claimed.
Here's a collection with just the maps, that's a little easier to use:
In the spring of 1996, a group of genealogists led by Jeff Murphy organized the Kentucky Comprehensive Genealogy Database Project, which evolved into the KyGenWeb Project. The idea was to provide a single entry point for genealogy data and research for all counties in Kentucky. In addition, the...
usgwarchives.net